Google Advert

Do you know what ?

I laugh in Latin.

Each time i see most of my friends who own companies. As soon as they start making some money, they start talking to me about all kinds of investments.

Today

“ Sir.Rejoice ! Real estate’s supposed to be good.”

Tomorrow

“I wanna be a super star investor, Sir.Rejoice ! any guild ?”

They run these big companies, selling great products and what do they do?

Run off and try to put their money in anything, EXCEPT their own business.

Why not just sell more of their products?

Double down on what’s already working, instead of starting to play in a field you know nothing about.

Which one do you think is the most likely to pan out?

Google AdWords is another easiest way to do it.

Today, I want to show you in clear picture what Google AdWords is all about and how to get started and use it to build your marketing way to success.

If you know the costs and margins of your products, AdWords is a really easy way to get your money’s worth, often boasting a ROI in the hundreds of percentage points

If you don’t know what ROI means, it stands for [ return on investment ] . For example, every N5,000 spent on the ads, you would be making N50,000 back.

So, you could turn N5,000 into N50,000 and thus quadruple your money.

A ROI like this is not uncommon with AdWords. And, if you get it right, a 900% ROI, as with my friend who wants to 10x his money, is definitely within reach.

But, let me start from the beginning.

Definitions

I mentioned pay per click (PPC) advertising before and Google AdWords is one way of doing so.

Remember that search engine marketing (SEM).

While you can also run ads on other search engines and display networks, Google knocks out the competition. So, when most people say SEM, they really mean Google AdWords.

These are the ads that show up at the top, when you search for something on Google.

Out of every $3 spent on online advertising, Google gets $1. Advertising is their single greatest source of revenue.

Over 95% of their $60 billion in annual revenue comes from Google AdWords. Combine that with the fact that over 1 million businesses use it and you know that companies are seriously spending money on this.

Put simply, Google AdWords is a marketplace where companies pay to have their website ranked at the top of a search results page, based on keywords.

It takes time to master and most companies lose money on it, because they’re not patient enough to get results from pay-per-click advertising. ==>Click HERE , To see how i will help you to start simple.

But Before You Click, Let’s Proceed With This FREE Training First

Before we begin, promise me that you’ll commit to 3 things:

Don’t spend a lot of money. Set a fixed budget. It can be as little as $50, or even $25. That’s enough to get started.

Don’t over complicate things. The Google AdWords interface is complex, it’s easy to get lost in it and start creating dozens of variations of ads. Don’t. Keep it simple. Do as little as the platform allows to begin.

Be patient. This is by far the most important. 99% of the people who lose money on AdWords simply quit too early (or spent too much, too fast). Have patience. It takes time.

Can you promise me that?

Raise your hand up high!

Okay, good.

Let’s get started with some basics.

Overview

Here are some basic terms that you need to know:

A keyword is a word or phrase the user searches for and then sees your ad. Your ads will only show up for the keywords that you pick.

(the dashboard is fairly complicated, but we’ll get to it)

Google counts the clicks on your ads and charges you for each click. They also count impressions, which is simply the number that tells you how often your ad has already been shown when users searched for that keyword.

If you divide clicks by impressions, you get the click-through-rate, or CTR. This is just the percentage of users who land on your advertised page because they clicked on your ad. This is important, because click-through rate tells you which ads are working well and which aren’t.

Google AdWords is like an auction house. You have to set a budget and a bid. The bid sets how much you are willing to pay for each click. If your maximum bid is $2, Google will only show your ad to people if other aren’t bidding more, on average.

Google wants to maximize their revenue, so, naturally, they’ll show the ad by the company who bids the highest amount for that keyword, assuming that all bidders have the same quality score.

However, if people are bidding less for the keyword that you want your ad to show up for, Google won’t spend your maximum bid. It optimizes impressions and bids. Therefore, you might actually end up paying less than $2 per click.

Your cost per click, or CPC, can thus be lower than your maximum bid, especially if your ads produce a good quality score. This is a metric based on the experience that the user has on your landing page, the relevancy of your website and your actual ad.

Google doesn’t just want to show people the ads from the highest bidder – they could be horrible ads. They care about their users so much that they’d rather show them a more relevant and better ad by someone who pays less, because that keeps users coming back to Google.

None of these things matter, though, if you’re not getting conversions.

A conversion is usually a sale, but, in general, it means the user took the action that you wanted them to take.

In some cases, that action might be something other than a purchase. Signing up to an email list or entering their personal information would be examples of other actions.

In most cases, though, it’s about the dough (ha, I’m so gangster!). And, rightfully so.

Companies often quickly burn thousands of dollars on AdWords pay-per-click advertising, since their budget is set daily and, unless you pause the process, runs endlessly.

Imagine creating 10 different campaigns for various keywords, with a $10 daily budget attached to each. If you let it run for a month, without paying attention, you’ll have paid a $3,000 bill!

That’s why you need conversions to be sales of a product, in order to quickly regain the money that you spend on ads.

In order to make money with ads, you need to sell something.

Makes sense, doesn’t it?

That’s why conversions is what we’ll start with. I’ll take you through how to set up your account, make sure you track your click-through rate and conversions and then we’ll get the ball rolling.

Now that you know that you want your maximum keyword price to be in the $3 range, it’s time to determine some keywords.

Put yourself in your customer’s shoes.

If you were looking to buy bricks online, what would you enter into the Google search bar?

Type in exactly that.

You can even set your product category, if you can find it. Also, set the right country and language, under ‘Targeting.’

For Google, only choose Google and exclude the network (these are sites that show banners etc.). Hit ‘Get ideas.’

Once you go to the keyword ideas tab, you’ll see the monthly search volume for your keywords in that region, plus the average CPC for each one.

From this, you can see that only 10 people per month in the US search for “buy bricks cheap”, but it costs almost $3.00 per click to advertise for that keyword.

Not such a great deal.

“cheap bricks,” on the other hand, has 260 searches per month, but only costs $0.78, on average.

That’s a solid start!

Before we decide on this keyword, though, let’s take a look at what the competition is doing.

Step 3: Check out the competition

Peeking into your competitor’s business will help you to determine if it’s easy or not to outrank them.

Remember how Google AdWords also considers quality? You want to know how good your ads have to be to win.

If you click on “Advertiser history”, you’ll even see the actual ads that your competitors use.

Alright, we have our budget, a good keyword and beatable competition, so it’s time to advertise, right?

Nope.

One more thing.

Step 4:Make sure your landing page rocks

“You’re about to spend money to get traffic.”

I need to make sure you understand that.

You will pay people money to go to your website, in essence.

It’s still your job to convert them and encourage them to pay you money.

Which means, if your landing page sucks, you’ll lose all of that money..

Make sure that you’ve done everything possible to convert visitors, before starting to advertise. If you send 1000 people to your landing page through AdWords and convert at 1%, you’ll make N100,000 with a N10,000 product. Imagine increasing that to 2% By Clicking ==> Here.

You’d instantly double your money and be able to spend more on ads.

Here are 4 main points to consider:

Keep the design simple. Don’t cram your page with tons of videos, animations and fancy design that take forever to load.

Make the headline powerful and make it stand out. It’s the first thing that people read. It better be good.

Write clear copy. Don’t try to sound smart by using complex terms that no one understands. Write as you speak. Be as clear as possible about what you have to offer.

Use bullet points, pictures and other visual elements. Again, don’t overdo it. These things are supposed to help the reader get a better grasp of your message, not become the sole reason for catching their eye.

Step 5: Set up your first campaign

After setting your daily budget. it’s time to target the right location.

If your business is operating only in the Nigeria, but Nigeria-wide, enter Nigeria.

Awesome, now all that’s missing is the ad.

Step 6:Write your first ad

So, what does it take to write a great Google ad? A few things.

Be precise. You don’t have a lot of room to express yourself. So, be short and sweet.

Having a unique value proposition (UVP) helps. It’s a one-sentence description of the benefits for your customers.

Remember the old Domino’s slogan?

“You get fresh, hot pizza, delivered to you in under 30 minutes – or it’s free!”

Not only do they not include the keyword properly (having it in its true form is very helpful), but there’s also no action that they prompt me to take.

Different types of stones, 12 years of experience.

And?

What does that mean for me? Nothing.

They’re not telling me to do anything, so I don’t.

Another key factor is your display URL. This is the green link displayed beneath the title. It can be anything you want it to be, but the domain has to match the domain of your landing page.

You should always include the keyword here, for additional highlighting.

Keeping those factors in mind, create your ad.

How about this:

If the page is going with the name of thi Blog website you are reading from as: passiveincomejob.com , we need to make that the display URL as well.

Pro tip: Remove the “http://” in your display URL to get more space for your keyword.

Let’s dissect the ad real quick:

Headline:

“Get cheap bricks fast” is a headline that doesn’t solely rely on the keyword and thus stands out, but it is also an action people can take, which makes it clickable.

Display URL:

Again, we remove the http and added “cheap-bricks” at the end, so it’ll be highlighted in the search results and make our ad more relevant to searchers of the keyword.

Ad copy:

You only have 2 lines, which isn’t much to get the message across. “Our bricks are cheap and delivered within 2 days.” That’s as clear as it gets. Of course, cheap is always relative, but it sounds good enough to the searcher.

Delivering within 2 days is definitely a bonus that most other brick stores might not offer (let alone mention in their ads).

Call-to-action (CTA):

“Order today.” What more needs to be said?

Have everything? Hit save and continue.

Step 7: Fix details

You’ll then land on your dashboard for the first time. First of all, pause the AdWords campaign, so it doesn’t start running just yet.

If you click on the campaign, you’ll see that inside of the campaign, Google automatically created an ad group. With our single ad example, the ad group doesn’t matter. But, when you start running a larger AdWords campaign with multiple keywords, dividing them into ad groups makes your ads management much simpler.

If you click on that, you’ll land on the ad level, where you can see your keyword.

Initially, Google sets this to broad match. Unfortunately, that’s not very targeted. It means that users can type in your keywords anywhere in the query.

But, if someone searches for “how can i make bricks at home cheap”, they’re not looking to buy cheap bricks, so that’s not what you want.

Exact match might be too targeted, though, since it only allows the exact phrase, “cheap bricks.”

Usually, phrase match is a good option, since it must contain your keyword as a fixed phrase, but can have other terms around it.

If users search “where to buy cheap bricks” your ad will still show up.

Now, all that you need to do is one last thing…

Step 8:Set up conversion tracking

Remember how I said that all of this is useless without conversions?

That’s why you need to track each and every single one of them.

How does Google do this?

With a snippet of code.

You put a bit of code on the page users reach, after successfully buying from you, which will let Google AdWords know that there was a purchase every time that a user reaches the page after clicking on an ad.

To set it up, go to “Tools” and then “Conversions.”

Click “+ Conversion.”

Now, choose “Website.”

Hit “save and continue.” Then. you’ll reach the page with the code snippet.

Just copy the code snippet and add it to the HTML code of your thank you page (the one people see right after making a purchase).

That’s it!

It’ll say unverified in your dashboard, at first, but that will change after a few hours or a day.Just copy the code snippet and add it to the HTML code of your thank you page (the one people see right after making a purchase).

That’s it!

It’ll say unverified in your dashboard, at first, but that will change after a few hours or a day.

Select your ad, in the checkbox and click “Edit,” then “Copy.”

Then, do the same and click “Paste” (or just press Cmd/Ctrl+V).

Paste your ad and check both boxes.

In order to get results on AdWords, you always need to test different ads against each other.

If you only run one ad and you get crappy results, you can’t possibly know what would have been better, because you can’t compare it to anything.

That’s why you should create at least a second ad on your second day, once the first has been approved.

Congrats! And now?

Sit back and wait. I’m serious.

Turn on your second ad and, once everything is running, do something else.

Don’t sit at the computer, waiting for things to happen.

Remember the third promise that you made before we began? AdWords takes patience.

Check back in a day. Then, create more ads and start building your first ad groups.

And, remember: Nothing matters without conversions.

It’s great if you can tell which ads get a better CTR, but, if they don’t get conversions, that also doesn’t help you make money.

Then, review, turn off ads that don’t work, add more keywords and double down on what’s performing well.

Nice! Nice!! Nice!!!

Listen up my beloved , In the journey of success there is no substitute access to classified information.

Simply put, the more you LEARN, the better your become, the better you become, the more you EARN.

============

Signed,

Rejoice Chikamnele – Sir J { aka the passive income coach }

If you like this piece, you may use the Share button below to pass on the link of this article to anyone interested.

===> Kindly show your support for this article or any of the post by clicking on the “Bookmark Social Networks Share Button” Below Here, so as to let others benefit from it too…Let’s Keep Sharing And Showing That Common “LOVE” To-One-Another. Click on the Share Button below & then click on the last icon which says “Bookmarks” & select any of the social networks we have there to SHARE THIS ARTICLE … Is Here===

Click On The Share Button Below to

Tell A Friend

================================

==> Please don’t forget to leave your Comments etc… On This Post. The more comments I see the more I would know you read this Irresistible tips and appreciate to Revealed More.